• ’ 4 » « rf M v • a « • >' ^ ^ '* , l * '• , ' 1 ms&mmszmm- 29,19(s “is life again' pound!,' Uccioti alth ani lartueni Edwar: lave tj. i marfei dth at: hevrettt i facultj wo con sach ik ’ars yment r Buick P«rli, MJ07 mi cards WER ’PE uld like ildren. !#■ » s. CallS THE BATTALION Tuesday, October 29, 1968 College Station, Texas Page 5 riginati erved IgS Tot i, p All Cat 19 eJ cars te pUf 1 ators Each Eacii day -ith ail ler arts "32 Southern Cal Widens Lead; Penn State, Kansas Move Up Idle Southern California wid ened its lead over runnerup Ohio State in the weekly Associated Press major college football poll Monday while both Kansas and Penn State closed ground on the leaders. The Trojans (6-0), who resume activity at Oregon this week drew 24 of the 43 first-place votes from a national panel of sports writers and sportscasters. Southern Cal had 21 first a week ago. Ohio State, 31-24 winners over Illinois for its fifth straight, at tracted 12 firsts, compared to 16 last week. The Buckeyes will be PARDNER You’ll Always Win The Showdown When You Get Your Duds Done At CAMPUS CLEANERS 1. South. Cal. 24 5-0 786 2. Ohio State 12 5-0 722 3. Kansas 6 6-0 686 4. Penn St. 1 5-0 592 5. Tennessee 4-0-1 442 6. Purdue 5-1 420 7. Georgia 5-0-1 394 8. California 5-1 336 9. Michigan 5-1 260 10. Missouri 5-1 197 BUSIER AGENCY REAL ESTATE • INSURANCE F.H.A.—Veterans and Conventional Loans FARM & HOME SAVINGS ASSOCIATION Home Office: Nevada, Mo. 3523 Texas Ave. (in Ridgecrest) 846-3708 AGGIE DANCE Saturday, November 9, 1968 Following SMU Football Game Three Great Bands In The North Hall Of The Dallas Memorial Auditorium 8:00 p. m. to 1:00 a. m. $2.00 Per Person Tickets May Be Obtained Through Student Leaders or From Any Member of The Dallas Hometown Club Sponsored By DALLAS FORMER STUDENTS Decals Bumper Stickers Comic Signs Party Records Comic Records Popular Albums Magazines Pocket Books Billiards Pin Ball Third National Bank Aggie Theatre Pin-Ups Novelties We cash aggie checks AGGIE DEN Open 8 a. m. till midnight 7 days weekly TOWN HALL THE ARTIST SHOWCASE presents HUNGARIAN QUARTET Tuesday, October 29, 1968 8:00 p. m. Memorial Student Center Ballroom Students $1.00 Adults $2.00 A&M Student Activity Card holders. Rotary Community (upon presentation of ticket booklet) and Town Hall Series Season ticket holders . . . ADMITTED FREE ! ! Gibson Wins Cy Young Award at home to Michigan State, No. 16, Saturday. Kansas made Iowa State its sixth straight victim, 46-25 and picked up six firsts to hold third place ahead of Penn State, which drew one first place ballot after bombing Boston College 29-0 for its fifth in a row. The point total, based on 20 for first and a graduated scale down to one point for 16th place, gave Southern California a 64- point lead over Ohio State, 786- 722. A week ago they led by only 16 points. Kansas was a strong third with 686 and Penn State a solid fourth with 592. The major casualty of the weekend was Notre Dame, up set by Michigan State, 21-17, and dropped all the way from No. 5 to No. 12. Tennessee, Purdue and Georgia, all moved up a peg to take over fifth, sixth and seventh places. Tennessee had an off day. Pur due downed Iowa 44-14 and Georgia beat Kentucky 35-14. California, Michigan and Mis souri all moved into the first 10. California thumped Syracuse, Michigan clobbered Minnesota 35-20 and Missouri ran over Kan sas State 56-20. NEW YORK G9P) — Bob Gib son, the St. Louis Cardinals’ pitcher who set a major league earned run average record low of 1.12, was named winner of the National League Cy Young Award Monday by the Baseball Writers Association of America. Gibson, a 22-9 performer for the pennant-winning Cards, was the unanimous choice of the 20- member panel, two from each league city. Gibson is in Japan with the Cardinals who are on a goodwill exhibition tour. Although Gibson had two pre vious 20-victory seasons he never received a Cy Young vote until this year. He is the second Negro to win the award. Don Newcombe of the old Brooklyn Dodgers was the first winner in 1956. Gibson’s earned run average of 1.12 broke the National League mark of 1.22 set by Grov er Cleveland Alexander of the Phillies in 1915. He also topped the American League record for a pitcher with 300 or more inn ings, ||r H ■ i ■ - •T - The top 10, with first place votes, records and total points: HEAD OVER HEELS Mohamed Ridha Labidi, captain of the Aggie soccer team, goes head over heels for the ball while leading his team to a 3-2 win over Texas Christian Saturday. The Aggies made a clean sweep of the weekend action with a 1-0 triumph over the University of Texas at Arlington at College Station Sunday. Royal Dizzy Plotting Ponies By ROBERT HEARD AUSTIN, Tex. OP) — Coach Darrell Royal says his University of Texas Longhorns will need all week “just to learn where to line up” when they play Southern Methodist University Saturday. “They’ve been in 42 different formations already — 42!” Royal said at his Monday news confer ence. SMU game films that Royal has seen show the league leading Mustangs used 38 forma tions in just one game, the Rice game, he thinks. Royal especially fears SMU’s pass-catching wizard Jerry Le- vias. “Levias can break up a game more ways than probably anybody else around,” he said. “And they’re not stillborn when they throw to those other peo ple.” 3-0, here Saturday. The game matches Texas’ powerful ground attack against SMU’s brilliant passing machine, which uses the short, down and out aerial the way a rushing offense uses the off tackle play. How does Royal plan to stop those quick passes in the flat, particularly the Longhorns’ leaky left flat? “They’re going to complete some passes. The only way to break even is to hope they miss a few, overthrow a few and have a few intercepted. One intercep tion wipes out quite a few short passes. We came up with three interceptions the other night (against Rice)” he said. Texas came out of their 38-14 victory over the Owls with no new injuries, Royal said. Halfback Chris Gilbert’s 213 yards rushing against Rice, which gave him 2,729 career yards and broke the SWC record of 2,618 set by TCU’s Jim Swink in 1954-55-56, prompted Royal to plug for him for All-American. r.4 The L o n g h o r n s, with a 2-1 league record, challenges SMU, v OF NEW HAVEN/A GENTLEMAN’S SHIRT 3im £» tarn co umbenritp men’s toear 329 University Drive 713 / 846-3706- College Station, Texas 77840 TAMU Town Hall Series Presents... HE FOUR SEASONS featuring FRANKIE VALLI Friday, Nov. 1, 1968 G. Rollie White Coliseum 8:00 p. m. Admission: Student Activity Card (Plus ID), Town Hall Season Ticket Date Tickets $1.50 Gen. Admission 3.00 Public Schools 2.00 GET YOUR TICKETS TODAY!! Call 822-1441 Allow 20 Minutes Carry Out or Eat-In THE PIZZA HUT 2610 Texas Aye. ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING SENIORS! Your Future is Unlimited in LOS ANGELES $851 A MONTH TO START Electrical engineers are needed for the challenging work of designing, building and operating one of the largest electric and water systems in the world. Arrange with the Placement Office to talk with our engineering representative who will be on campus November 14, 1968. DEPARTMENT OF WATER AND POWER City of Los Angeles An Equal Opportunity Employer 1968 ANNUAL OF THE SWC GRID SEASON ORDER NOW! PRE-PUBLICATION PRICE JUST $4.95 A 20% SAVINGS OFF REGULAR PRICE Here is the 1968 season. The zany, unpredict able Southwest Conference season. Where under dogs become topdogs on any given Saturday. Where comparative scores, home field advantage and other prognostic devices are thrown to the winds. Where on the day of the game it’s just us versus them and to hell with what happened last week or last year. Yes, the Southwest Conference has tradition — anyone can win, anyone can pull the big shocker of the season and fate doesn’t play favorites. A HISTORY OF THE 1968 SEASON HARDBOUND LIBRARY EDITION 73/4" X KP/z"/160 PAGES OVER 130 PHOTOS (Color aod Black & White) FULL COLOR DUST JACKET COMPLETE STORY OF 1968 COTTON BOWL GAME WITH PHOTOS 5 A&M 20 ALABAMA 16 PHOTOS AND ROSTERS OF 1968 TEAMS WEEK BY WEEK COVERAGE OF EACH GAME WITH PHOTOS AND STATISTICS SYNOPSIS AFTER EACH WEEK CONTAINS CONFERENCE AND SEASON STANDINGS, PLAYERS OF THE WEEK, TOP TEN POLLS AND FRESHMAN GAME RESULTS AFTER THE SEASON: ALL CONFERENCE AND ALL AMERICAN TEAMS, INDIVIDUAL LEADERS IN STATISTICS, FINAL STANDINGS AND FINAL TOP TEN 1969 SCHEDULES PREVIEW OF 1969 COTTON BOWL GAME FEATURE STORY ON SWC HISTORY FILL OUT COUPON BELOW AND MAIL ALONG WITH YOUR CHECK OR MONEY ORDER TO: FOOTBALL HISTORY, INC. 4140 SOUTHWEST FREEWAY/SUITE 401, HOUS TON, TEXAS 77027. (Make check or m.o. payable to Football History, Inc.) FOOTBALL HISTORY, INC. 4140 SOUTHWEST FREEWAY SUITE 401 HOUSTON, TEXAS 77027 Please mail me a copy of SOUTHWEST CONFERENCE FOOTBALL 1968 at the prepublication price. My copy will be mailed on or about January 1, 1969. Enclosed is my check or money order (no cash please) for $4.95 plus 25c to cover postage and handling. (Residents of Texas add 15c for state sales tax.) Name- Address. City- State li li